Acknowledgements
Preface: Remembering Benno Ndulu
Abbreviations and acronyms
1: Introduction to the Digital Economy Kit
2: Seizing opportunity for digital reform
3: Objectives: What is the Digital Economy Kit trying to do?
4: Assessment: Data and diagnostics
5: Multi-stakeholder dialogue
6: Strategy primer
7: A critical view on implementation
8: Conclusion
References
Index
Benno Ndulu served as Governor of the Central Bank of Tanzania from
2008 to 2018. Following his PhD degree in economics from
Northwestern University, Ndulu taught economics at the University
of Dar es Salaam, before joining the World Bank as a lead
economist. He published and taught widely on growth, regional
integration, adjustment, governance, trade, and investments. Most
recently, he served as Academic Co-director of the Pathways for
Prosperity Commission as a
Visiting Associate of Oxford University's Blavatnik School of
Government. He passed away in February 2021. Elizabeth Stuart is a
development practitioner. Before leading the Pathways to
Prosperity
Commission on Inclusive Development and its successor research and
policy centre at Oxford University's Blavatnik School of
Government, she has been variously Director of Policy and Research
at Save the Children UK; Director of the Growth, Poverty and
Inequality programme at the Overseas Development Institute; and
Head of Oxfam International's Washington Office.
Stefan Dercon is Professor of Economic Policy at the Blavatnik
School of Government and the Economics Department, and a Fellow of
Jesus College. He is also Director of the Centre for the Study of
African Economies. He combines his academic career with work as a
policy advisor, providing strategic economic and development
advice. Between 2011 and 2017, he was Chief Economist of the
Department of International Development (DFID), and he has served
as Academic Co-director of the Pathways for
Prosperity Commission. Since 2020, he has been the Development
Policy Advisor to successive Foreign Secretaries at the UK's
Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. Peter Knaack is an
Adjunct Professor
at the School of International Service, American University. He is
also a Senior Research Associate at the Global Economic Governance
Programme at the University of Oxford, Research Associate at the
Centre for Sustainable Finance at SOAS, University of London, and
Associate at the Council on Economic Policies, a Swiss think tank.
His research explores global financial governance, with a focus on
inclusive green finance, the political economy of global banking
regulation, China's role in global
financial governance, and the growing tension between nation-states
and transgovernmental networks over the authority to govern
cross-border economic activity.
A great read for any political leader or bureaucrat looking to
transform their government's digital economy. It is useful to
understand what it really takes to support emerging countries who
want to establish a digital public infrastructure.
*Nandan Nilekani, Chairman and Co-Founder, Infosys and Founding
Chairman, UIDAI*
Benno saw the huge potential of the digital economy for Africa and
devoted the last years of his life tirelessly working to get
countries to adopt it. Many countries have begun taking up the
technology but fail to adopt a whole of systems approach. Benno
would I think have wanted fellow policy makers to learn from the
lessons of some of the earlier adopters and what they got right -
and wrong.
*Vera Songwe, Senior Non-Resident Fellow, Brookings Institution and
former Executive Secretary UN Economic Commission for Africa*
An absolute gem for policymakers who want to turn their digital
transformation aspirations into reality. The writing is
refreshingly clear and devoid of jargon, making it a breeze to
follow. The authors offer invaluable practical insights based on
the experiences of a group of countries that have successfully
navigated this complex journey. And what's more, this book doesn't
shy away from the pitfalls and challenges you may encounter along
the way. It's an honest, straight-talking guide that will leave you
feeling inspired and confident to take action.
*Jean Philbert Nsengimana, Chair, Global Digital Inclusion
Partnership and Chief Digital Advisor, Centres for Disease Control
Africa*
This book is timely as it deals with such an important topic for my
country and for many others in sub Saharan Africa and beyond. The
book shows that the continent has an opportunity to fully benefit
from greater digital transformation reforms, further than payment
systems. Throughout, the book pays particular attention to context
and respecting inclusion of multi-stakeholders in the process.
Driving Digital Transformation tells us how to do this, not through
giving instructions, but instead by sharing the lessons learned
from other policymakers.
*Blandina Kilama, Economic advisor to President Suluhu, Republic of
Tanzania*
Where clear measures of digital success and failure are sometimes
lacking, the authors offer a full treatment of diagnosing and
evaluating digital readiness. The rigorous focus on the nuances of
implementation, especially in the book's Digital Economy Kit and
strategy primer, make this critical reading for both scholars and
practitioners!
*Aaron Maniam, Deputy Secretary (Industry & International),
Ministry of Communications and Information, Singapore*
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